Hindustan Times (Delhi)

India needs New Delhisize landfills for waste by 2050: Assocham report

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India littering its waste without sufficient treatment, it needs to set aside about 88 sq km of precious land — the size of New Delhi — for landfills by 2050, industry associatio­n Assocham said on Sunday, citing its study.

“Considerin­g that most of the waste in India is dumped without treatment, it would require an estimated 88 square kilometre of precious land to be brought under waste disposal through landfillin­g by 2050, which is equivalent to the size of area under administra­tion of the New Delhi Municipal Council,” said a joint report of Assocham and accounting firm PwC.

“This will eventually render the land unfit for any other use for as long as a half century before it can be stabilised for other uses,” said the report ‘Waste Management in India: Shifting Gears’.

With around 50% of India’s population projected to be living in urban areas by 2050, the volume of waste generation will grow by 5% per year.

Thus, the projected waste quantity is 101 million tonnes (MT) a year by 2021, 164 MT a year by 2031, and 436 MT a year by 2050, according to the report.

It said that Tier 1 cities with population ranging from one to five million have been estimated to generate around 80% of the country’s total waste.

The study estimates the current per day per capita waste generation in medium cities at around 300-400gm and for large cities between 400-600gm, and this figure would increase in line with present urbanisati­on and consumptio­n patterns.

The report noted some issues hampering waste management in India are improper planning, complex institutio­nal set-up, constraint­s in capacity for waste management and limited funds with urban local bodies.

“Though private sector can play a critical and greater role in waste management in India, there are various issues and bottleneck­s on different fronts that have made it challengin­g to successful­ly implement projects — policy and regulatory, financing, project conceptual­isation and structurin­g, technology and capacity,” an Assocham statement said here. IANS

THE REPORT SAID THAT TIER 1 CITIES WILL GENERATE AROUND 80% OF THE NATION’S WASTE

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